USA TODAY International Edition

Don’t go easy on Manafort, judge told

Prosecutor­s: Ex-Trump aide ‘hardened’ criminal

- Bart Jansen

WASHINGTON – Prosecutor­s painted a damning picture of President Donald Trump’s former campaign chairman as a “hardened” criminal who “brazenly violated the law” and urged that his sentence not be reduced in a memo released Saturday.

In the court filing from special counsel Robert Mueller’s office, prosecutor­s urged a federal judge not to reduce the sentence for Paul Manafort for his conspiracy case in the District of Columbia. Prosecutor­s said Manafort deserved a significant sentence without specifying what it should be, but that it shouldn’t include credit for his promise to cooperate.

Federal guidelines call for a sentence roughly double what Manafort could receive. The guidelines called for a 17- to nearly 22-year term for the charges in the case. But the sentence for the two charges he acknowledg­ed is capped at 10 years. Whatever he receives could run after the sentence in his separate Virginia case.

Judge Amy Berman Jackson earlier ruled that Manafort lied repeatedly to investigat­ors despite the cooperatio­n he promised as part of a plea agreement.

“For over a decade, Manafort repeatedly and brazenly violated the law,” prosecutor Andrew Weissmann wrote in the 25-page sentencing memo, which was accompanie­d by 800 pages of partially redacted exhibits. “His crimes continued up through the time he was first indicted in October 2017 and remarkably went unabated even after indictment.”

The case has many aggravatin­g factors and no mitigating ones, it said.

The filing was made public Saturday. Manafort’s lawyers will respond to the filing Monday. Jackson scheduled sentencing on March 13.

Whatever she decides could be irrelevant after Manafort is sentenced March 8 in Virginia on eight counts of

tax and bank fraud. In August, Manafort was convicted in Virginia of hiding tens of millions of dollars in overseas banks and corporatio­ns, to avoid paying taxes.

Prosecutor­s in that case recommende­d that U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis put Manafort in prison for nearly 20 to 24 years, with fines, restitutio­n and property forfeiture totaling up to $53 million. It could essentiall­y become a life sentence for 69-year-old Manafort.

His guilty plea in September in D.C. dealt with conspiracy charges for failing to report lobbying for Ukraine and for tampering with witnesses to get them to change their stories.

The cases stemmed from when Manafort served as a political consultant for a pro-Russian faction in Ukraine during the decade before he joined Trump’s campaign from March to August 2016.

Manafort was a key figure in Mueller’s investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election because he ranked high in Trump’s campaign and dealt routinely with Russian contacts. He attended the Trump Tower meeting in June 2016 with Russians offering damaging informatio­n about Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

The documents released Saturday do not appear to provide any further view into Manafort’s alleged criminal conduct beyond the existing conviction­s on financial fraud, witness tampering charges, along with the collapse of his plea agreement with Mueller’s prosecutor­s in the Washington, D.C., case.

Most notably, the court papers do not offer any informatio­n involving coordinati­on between the Trump campaign and Russia.

Manafort’s partner in the Ukraine work, Russian national Konstantin Kilimnik, also faces conspiracy charges in the D.C. case.

“Manafort’s conduct ... reflects a hardened adherence to committing crimes and lack of remorse.”

Prosecutor­s’ sentencing memo

 ?? SHAWN THEW/EPA-EFE ?? Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort has been lauded by President Donald Trump for his refusal “to break.”
SHAWN THEW/EPA-EFE Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort has been lauded by President Donald Trump for his refusal “to break.”

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